Camco, Incorporated v. Evans

377 S.W.2d 703, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 1963
Docket14235
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 377 S.W.2d 703 (Camco, Incorporated v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camco, Incorporated v. Evans, 377 S.W.2d 703, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1673 (Tex. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

BARROW, Justice.

This is a wrongful death action brought by the surviving widow and two minor children of deceased, Seth Burns Evans, a general employee of Crews Wells Service, against Cameo, Inc. Crews Wells Service is a drilling contractor and Cameo is an oil field specialty service company. At the time of the accident in which Evans lost his life, both Crews and Cameo were performing services for Humble Oil & Refining Company. After a jury trial, the court granted appellees’ motion for judgment, and rendered judgment whereby ap-pellees recovered damages from appellant in the total sum of $50,000.

Appellant has perfected this appeal and asserts: (1) that it is entitled to judgment on the jury finding that the deceased was a “special servant” of appellant at the time of the accident; (2) that the jury’s findings of primary negligence were destroyed by other findings; (3) that the jury findings of primary negligence are in irreconcilable conflict with other findings; (4) the amounts of damages as found by the jury are manifestly unjust and so excessive as to show that the jury was influenced by passion and prejudice; (5) the court erred in overruling exceptions and objections to the duplicitous pleading and submission of the primary negligence issues; and (6) the court erred in overruling appellant’s objections to the damage instructions.

Evans was killed in an accident which occurred on August 2, 1961, on an Humble lease in Brooks County. A well on this lease was full of water and three companies were employed by Humble to rework the well. Crews Wells Service had been on this location about two weeks before the accident with its rig, consisting of a substructure, rig floor, rotary, derrick and cathead (winch). On the afternoon of August 1, two Cameo employees arrived on the location for the purpose of opening the sleeve on the well. After it was opened the Nitrogen Service Company forced nitrogen into the well in order to evacuate fluid from the casing and tubing. This was completed early in the morning of August 2, and then it was Cameo’s job to close the sleeve. The sleeve was opened several thousand feet below the surface and in order for Cameo to open and close it, special equipment was required and furnished by Cameo. A common oil field fitting known as a “unibolt” is attached to the Christmas tree at the well’s surface. One-half of this unibolt is con *705 nected with the Christmas tree and the other half is on whatever equipment is to be connected to the Christmas tree. In performance of its work, Cameo furnished a wire-line valve or “blow-out preventer” which was connected to the unibolt. The special tools used for opening and closing the sleeve are lowered into the well in a 16' tube known as a “lubricator.”

On this occasion, after it was determined by Crews’ toolpusher and Clovis Higgin-botham, the wireline operator in charge for Cameo on this location, that the sleeve had been properly closed, Cameo was required to rig down its equipment and upon removal of Cameo’s equipment, Crews would take down its rig and leave the location. The testimony is undisputed that it is customary in oil field work for the rig crew to assist the specialty companies in rigging down their equipment. The accident occurred during this rigging down, while the wire-line valve was being removed.

Cameo furnished two men for its part of the work — Higginbotham and his helper, Bancroft. Crews had four men on this location when the accident occurred — Orea Lee Belk, driller; Lee Craig, chainhand; Jessie Rakowitz and the deceased, S. B. Evans, floormen. The rig crew were not engaged in any particular work of their own at the time and were assisting Cameo in rigging down its equipment. Belk was operating the cathead, Rakowitz and Evans were on the rig floor, and Craig was on the ground near the Christmas tree. The lubricator had been hanging in the rig until after the tests were completed and it was then lowered to the ground by use of the catline on the cathead. The tools were removed and Higginbotham was placing them in the Cameo truck.

Bancroft and Craig were working to loosen the wireline valve from the unibolt connection. The catline was lowered by Belk through the hole in the rig floor to the wireline valve so that the valve could be hoisted after it was freed from the unibolt on the Christmas tree. Evans and Rakowitz were waiting to guide the valve through the opening and then over the side of the rig floor. In accordance with customary practice, Bancroft struck the unibolt with a hammer to loosen the connection. Unfortunately, the master valve on the Christmas tree had not been closed, and about 3,000 pounds of pressure per square inch was against the unibolt and it exploded when struck. Evans was instantly killed; Bancroft, Craig and Radowitz were injured.

The jury found that Cameo’s employees were negligent in three aspects, and each was a proximate cause of Evans’ death. 1 The jury found, however, in response ta *706 Issue No. 11, that “in the work being done at the time of and immediately before the accident * * * the Cameo operator, Hig-ginbotham, and his helper, Bancroft, had the right to control what Mr. S. B. Evans was doing and would do and how it was to he done.” It was stipulated that Cameo carried workmen’s compensation insurance, and therefore Cameo urges that Evans was its special employee at the time of the accident and cannot recover in this common law action. Appellees urged in their motion for judgment, or in the alternative for judgment non obstante veredicto, that there were no pleadings or evidence to support this defense.

It is our opinion that the pleadings of.Cameo do not raise the defense of “special servant,” and that the trial court improperly overruled appellees’ objection to the submission of this issue. Cameo alleged that it was hired to perform services in opening and closing a sleeve far below the surface of the ground and that this service had been completed properly; that the accident occurred during the removal of Cameo equipment, which was an undertaking participated in by Cameo employees and members of Crews’ rig crew.

Cameo further alleged that: “According to the usage and custom prevailing, these members of the rig crew, including Evans, since they were not otherwise occupied, helped and assisted in the disassembling and packing of the Cameo equipment, and in such work the members of the rig crew technically were subject to the direction and control of the Cameo employee, as to what should be done, and when and as to the manner in which it would be done. In practice, the rig crew knew what should be done and how to do it and accordingly proceeded without specific direction, or actual supervision and control by the Cameo operator or his helper.” It then alleged that Craig, without specific or actual direction, control or supervision by Cameo’s employees, began to remove the wireline valve without closing the master valve, and that his failure to close the master valve was the sole proximate cause of the accident.

Cameo alleged that Evans had assisted and was to assist in lowering the Crews’ cat-line through the opening in the rig floor and raising the wireline valve.

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Bluebook (online)
377 S.W.2d 703, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camco-incorporated-v-evans-texapp-1963.